4.6 Article

Survival of surface bacteriophages and their hosts in in situ deep-sea environments

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MICROBIOLOGY SPECTRUM
卷 -, 期 -, 页码 -

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AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/spectrum.04534-22

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in situ deep-sea environments; stability of viral particles; viral infectivity; stability of prokaryotes; in situ deep-sea long-term incubation

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Studying the stability and activity of viruses and their hosts in the deep-sea environment, it was found that surface viruses may retain long-term infectivity after sinking, potentially influencing deep-sea microbial populations, ecological functions, and biogeochemical cycles through interactions with bacteria.
Through particles sinking as well as the movement of water masses, a fraction of bacterioplankton and virioplankton can be transported vertically from the surface to the deep oceans, and display significant changes in viral-bacterial interactions. The survival and activity of the sinking prokaryotes and viruses in the deep-sea environment is crucial for our understanding of deep-sea ecosystems and biogeochemical cycles. However, due to the substantial challenge involved in situ deep-sea incubation, the effect of the deep-sea environments on the ecology of surface prokaryotes and viruses is poorly studied. To fill this knowledge gap, we used an in situ deep-sea long-term incubation device to examine the effect of the natural deep-sea environment on the stability and activity of four viruses and their hosts (Prochlorococcus, Synechococcus, and heterotrophic bacteria) isolated from the surface ocean. Our results showed that viral particles had still not decayed completely after in situ incubation for 1 year, with an average retention rate of 5.69% +/- 5.13% (ranging from 1.25% to 13.06%) for infectivity and 68.11% +/- 40.50% (ranging from 8.55% to 99.08%) for particles. This suggests that surface viruses probably retain long-term infectivity after sinking and may influence deep-sea microbial populations in terms of activity, function, diversity, and community structure through viral-bacterial interactions and ultimately affect deep-sea biogeochemical cycles.

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